In fallout from First NBC, lawyer suspended after failed bid to stave off a widow's foreclosure
The
Its most recent casualty is
The
But the seven justices in
Klein says that he was only trying his best for his client,
"
Gibbs pled guilty to fraud and testified in January in the federal trial of former First NBC CEO
In his testimony, Gibbs said that at one point Ryan had urged him to use loan proceeds to cover up the fact that two land projects
On the hook for millions
By the time of the bank's collapse, Heisler was on the hook for more than
Ryan was found guilty in February of 46 counts of bank fraud and is scheduled to be sentenced in August if his July appeal for a new trial fails. Gibbs and eight other borrowers and bank officials who pled guilty and testified are expected to be sentenced after Ryan.
Heisler was never accused of involvement in the fraud. When federal regulators seized First NBC in 2017, her notes were among the
Girod LoanCo, a subsidiary of giant private equity firm TPG, bought the Heisler loans and began pursuing her assets, which included a
Klein's efforts to keep foreclosure at bay included, among other things, attempts to move proceedings from Judge
All of Klein's efforts failed and the case kept getting sent back to Schlegel's court.
Heisler was not the only one to try and keep Girod from collecting on First NBC debt.
Haines' businesses included
Over the edge
But Klein took the fight too far, the Supreme Court found. In their suspension order, the justices said he had sent "threatening and disrespectful correspondence" to Schlegel's court clerk and made inappropriate attempts to have the judge make favorable decisions for his client.
When Schlegel refused to hear Klein's bid alleging that Girod LoanCo was a fraudulent corporation, Klein tried to have Schlegel recused from the case. He also accused Girod's law firm, Kean Miller, of aiding in a Girod fraud and Schlegel of being in the law firm's pocket because it had made contributions to his election campaign.
The
The Klein investigation, which began in 2019 and went through two formal hearings, also found that he had sent harassing emails to Kean Miller's managing partner and several of the firm's senior managers, accusing them of aiding in criminal activity. He demanded they dismiss the case and pay
Kean Miller's managing partner,
A vigorous defense
In the interview, Klein, 79, said he felt like he was being persecuted because of his zealous defense of his client, who died in late December at age 79.
"Once the court saw
Two of the Supreme Court justices,
They pointed to the fact he had continued to file motions even after the suspension order. Klein said he will appeal the suspension.
"Do I look like a quitter?" he said.
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